Weather Alert

Weather Alert

...BRIEF PERIOD OF WINDY CONDITIONS INTO THE EARLY AFTERNOON...
...WIND ADVISORY IN EFFECT UNTIL 2 PM CDT THIS AFTERNOON...
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN MILWAUKEE/SULLIVAN HAS ISSUED A
WIND ADVISORY...WHICH IS IN EFFECT UNTIL 2 PM CDT THIS AFTERNOON.
* TIMING...WIND GUSTS DEVELOPING ON THE BACK EDGE OF SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS LATE THIS MORNING INTO THE EARLY AFTERNOON.
* WINDS...SOUTHEASTERLY WIND GUSTS OF 35 TO 50 MPH.
* IMPACTS...DOWNED TREE BRANCHES POSSIBLE. SMALLER OBJECTS SUCH AS
TRASH CANS AND LAWN FURNITURE BLOWN OVER. DIFFICULTY DRIVING FOR
HIGH PROFILE VEHICLES.
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
A WIND ADVISORY MEANS THAT WINDS OF 45 MPH ARE EXPECTED. WINDS
THIS STRONG CAN MAKE DRIVING DIFFICULT...ESPECIALLY FOR HIGH
PROFILE VEHICLES. USE EXTRA CAUTION.
&&

Weather Alert

...MORE PERIODS OF MODERATE TO HEAVY RAINFALL TONIGHT...
...FLASH FLOOD WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 7 PM CDT THIS EVENING
THROUGH SATURDAY MORNING...
THE FLASH FLOOD WATCH CONTINUES FOR
* PORTIONS OF SOUTH CENTRAL WISCONSIN AND SOUTHEAST WISCONSIN,
INCLUDING THE FOLLOWING AREAS, IN SOUTH CENTRAL WISCONSIN,
DANE, GREEN, IOWA, LAFAYETTE, AND ROCK. IN SOUTHEAST
WISCONSIN, JEFFERSON, KENOSHA, MILWAUKEE, OZAUKEE, RACINE,
WALWORTH, WASHINGTON, AND WAUKESHA.
* FROM 7 PM CDT THIS EVENING THROUGH SATURDAY MORNING
* MORE ROUNDS OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTED TONIGHT
OVER SOUTHERN WISCONSIN. THESE STORMS WILL BE CAPABLE OF
PRODUCING HEAVY RAINFALL RATES IN A SHORT PERIOD OF TIME. 1 TO 2
INCHES OF ADDITIONAL RAIN IS EXPECTED PRIMARILY SOUTH OF A LINE
FROM MINERAL POINT TO MADISON TO PORT WASHINGTON. HOWEVER, LOCALIZED
AREAS OF A FEW INCHES OF RAIN ARE POSSIBLE.
* RUNOFF FROM THIS HEAVY RAINFALL MAY RESULT IN AREAS OF FLASH
FLOODING, ALONG WITH ADDITIONAL RISES ON AREA RIVERS.
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...
A FLASH FLOOD WATCH MEANS THAT CONDITIONS MAY DEVELOP THAT LEAD
TO FLASH FLOODING. FLASH FLOODING IS A VERY DANGEROUS SITUATION.
YOU SHOULD MONITOR LATER FORECASTS AND BE PREPARED TO TAKE ACTION
SHOULD FLASH FLOOD WARNINGS BE ISSUED.
&&

Gov. Tony Evers is proposing to require the state’s utilities be carbon-free by 2050.

The proposal, which would go further than the self-imposed goals of almost all utilities, is part of a budget that would also significantly increase state funding for renewable energy and conservation.

Wisconsin would join Hawaii, which has established a goal of 100 percent renewable energy by 2045, and California, which last year adopted a bill mandating carbon-free electricity by the same deadline. Minnesota and Michigan have set targets of 80 percent carbon reduction by 2050.

Evers’ proposal calls for carbon-free electricity, which would include nuclear generation. About 15 percent of the state’s electricity is currently generated at the Point Beach Nuclear Plant. More than three-quarters of the total comes from fossil fuels.

In December, Xcel Energy, which serves about 250,000 customers in western Wisconsin, became the nation’s first major utility to commit to eliminating all carbon emissions by 2050. Exactly how remains uncertain.

“Engineers would tell you it is technically feasible,” Mark Stoering, president of Xcel Energy’s operations in Wisconsin and Michigan said earlier this year. “There are some practical challenges.”

Other elements of Evers’ energy budget include:

$75 million to fund energy conservation projects, of which a third would be allocated to state-owned facilities.

Allowing the Public Service Commission to increase funding for the Focus on Energy program beyond the current limit of 1.2 percent of utility revenues.

Transforming the State Energy Office into the Office of Sustainability and Clean Energy, which would be overseen by a political appointee and administer a $4 million clean energy research grant. Evers would transfer the office and five employees from the PSC to the Department of Administration.

The budget also proposes spending $10 million of the remaining $25 million from the Volkswagen emissions cheating settlement on electric vehicle charging stations. The rest would be dedicated to replacing public transit vehicles.

Wisconsin is scheduled to receive $67.1 million over 10 ten years to offset the excess pollution. State law now requires $42 million of that to be spent in 2017-19 for replacement of state vehicles and the transit assistance program.

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